Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Eating/Grazing/Food observations - Updated

If you are familiar with Bermuda you know most of its food is shipped from the US (most grocery stores especially the fruit and veg produce section looks remarkably like any produce aisle in the US) which makes everything really expensive. Like $1.89 an apple expensive (not $1.89 a pound) or $10 for the liquid hazelnut coffee mate that my parents enjoy so much (sorry parents, guess I outed you there!) which can be found often for $3 in the US. So I'm trying to be thoughtful in how and what I buy. However should I run out of money and have to survive off of foraging the island, here's how I would survive. 

1. Fish. Yes, I love looking at them under water but if push came to shove...

2. The island is teeming with wild chickens. I asked my first airbnb hosts if any local residents ever snatch a chicken out of the tree where they roost at night. It was a definite no. Guess people are not going hungry here in Bermuda.



3. Fruit of the island - prickly pear, Bay Grape (sea grape or cocoplum in other parts of the world), Surinam Cherry, Natal plum, loquats -  and of course in season you can find bananas, mangos and oranges also that people have growing in their yards. And should you need some allspice, the trees are abundant everywhere as well!

Prickly Pear, Surinam Cherry, Sea/Bay Grape

Prickly Pear

Surinam Cherry





Surinam Cherries are new to me having a citrusy taste especially when less ripe (with hints of not fully ripe mango) and as they darken up becoming quite sweet. It's not really the season for them right now but they are popular at this time of year, looking like little pumpkins! More info on the Surinam Cherry here.

Sea/Bay Grape

My Housing - updated

For those that want to see and know a little bit more about my housing situation in Bermuda...I arrived here having only booked a month at my first ever airbnb which turned out to be a gem run by hosts Karen and Danny. It was actually one of the first airbnb's to get started on the island a few years ago. And it turned out to be such a beautiful restful space for my first six weeks on the island. From the moment I entered the front gate which is an old wagon wheel (more on that in a moment), pushing open the beautiful Bermudian Cedar exterior door, walking past the pool and up  some steps onto a terrace under a frangipani tree to my studio which had peaceful music playing as I entered, I knew I had been given a gift. Angel Mews as it's AirBnB link describes, definitely provided peace and tranquility. If you ever need a place to stay here in Bermuda, try to get this place. 







Typical Bermuda water catching roof

Sunrise...every day

I loved just watching out the windows every day and seeing the light and the greenery. And I loved hearing the little tiny frogs lull me to sleep every night and watching the lizards scamper about during the day. Horseshoe Bay, the closest of the south island beaches was only a 15-20 minute walk away.



Tiny frogs - this one was a rescue from the pool!

Friday, November 13, 2020

My friends the fish

One of my goals  in coming here was to swim a lot and snorkel a lot and spend as much time in the water and under the water as possible. One of the highlights of when I was here six years ago was swimming off the dock and seeing a HUGE 3 1/2-4 foot Hogfish swim right by me - and evidently they are territorial so he/she would swim that same route every day around the same time. He/she(?) was stunningly big and beautiful with stripes of purple and red. I was a little freaked out and amazed!

I recently saw a baby hogfish (only about 8 inches) dart away from me but yet to see a big guy. Other individual highlights include almost running into a surprisingly large invasive Lion fish, several trumpet fish, a very menacing barracuda that eyed me very watchfully - and loads of little fish that surround me - a couple times the water gets dark because the school is so big! But without doubt the highlight has been the many different kinds of parrot fish (Bermuda has nine species) which seem to dominate the waters in so many different colors and hues and sizes - and making it more complex some of these ubiquitous fish change color and design over the course of their lifetime and even more complex, many start as female and change to male later on in their life! I don't have an underwater camera but here are a couple photos taken from the internet of a few of my favorite parrot fish species and a  link with more fascinating details on these amazing fish.

Princess (or Stoplight?) Parrotfish

Blue Parrotfish

Rainbow Parrotfish


And my two favorite parrot fish experiences so far:

Having a school of two dozen 1-2 foot blue parrot fish swim right underneath you and all around is truly beautiful and calming. Their vivid blue isn't captured in this picture above - I only hope you can one day experience it. 

And without a doubt my #1 piscis highlight began to materialize the very first day I made it to the water's edge and looking down from the cliff I was standing on, I saw these large objects in the water and thought what am I looking at?! Turns out that  rainbow parrot fish grow quite big (think 3-4 feet) and being vegetarian (like all parrot fish) they come right to the edge of the water to graze on the greenery and algae growing on the rocks. Whether it is their size or what I don't know but these large ones consistently can be found around the edge of the coast nibbling away, sometimes by themselves, sometimes with what I imagine is their family. And let me tell you,  every time I am swimming and come around a corner and one of these gentle giants is right there, it takes my breath away. I cannot even imagine what it would be like to swim with a a whale shark - these are enough! 


It's interesting that they are called rainbow parrot fish because certainly by the time they are this big they are mainly brown with some swatches of bright moss green. I do have photos of these guys taken from above them while they are nibbling. Sometimes it feels like you can reach down and just pat them on their fin!





And now you know! Everyone should have the opportunity to swim with these gentle giants and their smaller more colorful cousins!

Duncan


Friday, October 23, 2020

Bermuda...for a little longer


Two weeks ago today I landed in/on one of the most densely populated countries (technically a British Overseas Territory) in the world (it's true, look it up!), one of the more expensive places to live in the world (top 5 per capita GDP, a place with no running streams or fresh water other than what falls out of the sky or hidden in deep aquifers, 4 kinds of mosquitos, 10 kinds of cockroaches - sounds like bliss right? Well, if that's the worst that can be said about Bermuda, bring it on!



Friends have asked why Bermuda? (other than the selling points already mentioned above!) The more typical answers could all be said - beautiful pink sand beaches, snorkeling, sub tropical island, (equals no freezing cold winters, though it cools off to about 60 in December and January) take a look at the following photos and tell me why not??


Horseshoe Bay

Horseshoe Bay




Wednesday, October 14, 2020

A Seattle/Northwest Summer

I spent my summer in Seattle taking advantage of many things Northwest that I have missed over the last eleven years since moving to the East Coast – Puget Sound waters, berries and more berries, followed by by plums and pears and apples, hikes in the woods, beautiful West Seattle gardens and flowers, spending time with my family, adventures with my parents, cooking for my parents (sometimes cooking and adventures were the same thing!) a week spent house and animal sitting at my sister’s and helping 10 pups enter the world three hours after they left on a week long get away! (but that deserves it's own post!)

I've never been so grateful to be near the water and almost daily would find myself down at the water's edge in West Seattle, usually at Lowman Beach or at Lincoln Park. I hope you enjoy these Seattle/Northwest photos.


Lowman Beach
Lowman Beach
View from Lowman Beach

View from Lowman Beach



View from Lowman Beach

Birch Bay or somewhere close by. All the little dots in the water are herons. I had never seen so many in one spot.



Barclay Lake

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Coast to Coast during Covid

Almost twelve years ago Andrea and her dad and I set out from Seattle, headed for Durham NC in a 24 foot truck Budget rental truck as we began our journey and move to the East Coast. Full blog post here. Readers of this blog will know that much has happened in the time since...many miles travelled.

And so now I return back to Seattle - by myself - again driving a Budget truck (thankfully a little smaller) and not towing a car this time. Grateful to have my friend Mark along to help with the driving as well as providing some much welcomed navigational and emotional support. A smaller truck meant we could actually exceed the speed limit if we wished and due to a tight turn around time for Mark at the end, we managed to do the drive in four and a half days instead of six. 

Not as much stuff as first trip...or as many plants.

We stayed at four Hilton properties and it was interesting to see what Covid restrictions (or lack of) were in place as we moved across the country from state to state with stops in Indiana, Iowa, South Dakota and Montana. Full hotel reviews as usual can be found here - though you'll have to scroll back through the list. Like anyone who was taking this new reality somewhat seriously we had plenty of hand sanitizer, masks and whatever else we needed to navigate through new terrain. And as you can imagine as we moved away from the coast, fewer masks were seen - at some petrol/gas stations we were the only one's wearing masks. At a stop in South Dakota close to Sturgis where the large motorcycle rally would be held in a few weeks, I overheard an unmasked local dismissing covid but also not wanting all the strangers to bring it in when they attended the rally. There's a conundrum! 

Anyway, we made it safely to my parents in Seattle where we were welcomed warmly. Mark was a good companion and driver. We encountered kindness from strangers at different points and the truck got us across the miles in  good shape. And I was grateful to again be able to see miles and miles of landscape and big sky roll by which was good for my soul. As I discovered twelve years ago, if you have never driven across the country from one coast to the other, it is a gratifying thing to know that you can do it. 

First road trip photo as we crossed our first state line...

Temporary pull off due to a massive storm, hail and tornado watch

Waiting for the storm to pass